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Books made on Bookrite
Browse books authors have published in the Bookrite Library. Free titles open straight in the flipbook viewer; priced titles let you preview a few pages before you buy.
Library
Browse books authors have published in the Bookrite Library. Free titles open straight in the flipbook viewer; priced titles let you preview a few pages before you buy.

by Stephen Schmitt

by Dr. Victoria Schmitt
Deep in the blue ocean, under a canopy of swaying seaweed, lived a tiny octopus named Trey.

by Bookrite - Quillby
In the whirlwind of daily life, moments slip away like sand through fingers, yet in those spare minutes, beauty unfolds. This collection of heartfelt reflections captures the chaos and tenderness of ordinary days—where breakfast is a balancing act and grocery lists become love letters. Join the journey through messy kitchens and quiet prayers, finding joy in the overlooked and grace in the hustle. Embrace the imperfect, and discover that every second holds a story worth telling.

by Bookrite - Quillby
Mother Goose’s Sleepy Friends is a soothing verse-and-image bedtime story where cozy animals drift off one by one until Mother Goose sings everyone to sleep.

by Bookrite - Quillby
The E-Bike Incident is a neighborhood mystery about Mason Reed and his friends, who are blamed for a string of vandalism after riding their e-bikes too recklessly. As the community rushes to judge them, Mason follows the clues and uncovers the truth: someone else has been setting them up. It’s a fast-paced story about fairness, rumors, responsibility, and being heard before being judged.

by Stephen Schmitt
Most books about change explain what to do next. The Third Door does not. It begins at the end—an imagined reckoning—and stays with what follows when answers remain incomplete. There are no examples offered for instruction, no reassurances provided for comfort. The absence is intentional. This is a book for readers willing to sit inside unresolved questions, who understand that not all meaningful shifts announce themselves cleanly. The Third Door does not tell you what to choose.